Volume 270,
Number 9,
Issue of March 3, 1995 pp. 4457-4465
©1995 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
Sequence
Identity and Antigenic Cross-reactivity of White Face Hornet Venom
Allergen, Also a Hyaluronidase, with Other Proteins
(Received for publication, October
20, 1994; and in revised form, November 17, 1994)
Gang
Lu,
Loucia
Kochoumian ,
Te Piao
King
White face hornet (Dolichovespula maculata) venom has
three known protein allergens which induce IgE response in susceptible
people. They are antigen 5, phospholipase A
, and
hyaluronidase, also known as Dol m 5, 1, and 2, respectively. We have
cloned Dol m 2, a protein of 331 residues. When expressed in bacteria,
a mixture of recombinant Dol m 2 and its fragments was obtained. The
fragments were apparently generated by proteolysis of a Met-Met bond at
residue 122, as they were not observed for a Dol m 2 mutant with a
Leu-Met bond.
Dol m 2 has 56% sequence identity with the honey bee
venom allergen hyaluronidase and 27% identity with PH-20, a human sperm
protein with hyaluronidase activity. A common feature of hornet venom
allergens is their sequence identity with other proteins in our
environment. We showed previously the sequence identity of Dol m 5 with
a plant protein and a mammalian testis protein and of Dol m 1 with
mammalian lipases.
In BALB/c mice, Dol m 2 and bee hyaluronidase
showed cross-reactivity at both antibody and T cell levels. These
findings are relevant to some patients' multiple sensitivity to
hornet and bee stings.